SkaBob wrote: Then there's Willow metropark...It's one of my favorite courses, but you can only play it in the winter. The mosquitos are seriously insane.

The standing water at Willow really smells bad. I played it for the first time in November and it was an instant favorite. Then the snow melted and the middle third of the course became a stinky mudpit. Now I go to Lakeshore instead. Are the skeeters bad on the whole course?

Willow is a mosquito infested swamp which is directly adjacent to an expressway. The traffic noise is so loud on a few holes you have to yell to be heard. Otherwise it is a pretty good course. The mosquitoes are so thick and rabid there that deet is just like steak sauce to them.

No really, it is a better course than the righty hyzer POS I'm playing in a tournament tomorrow.

No wonder you like Kensington so much, I swear 99% of fairways are custom-made for sidearms.

Mr.SmOOOth wrote:The standing water at Willow really smells bad. I played it for the first time in November and it was an instant favorite. Then the snow melted and the middle third of the course became a stinky mudpit. Now I go to Lakeshore instead. Are the skeeters bad on the whole course?

Right now it's not so bad, but skeeters love that place, usually nowhere is safe. That course will be wet when there hasn't been any rain for months. Great place to go when you want to avoid crowds.

Because courses generally are SO, SO, SO righty biased anytime a course is balanced it is viewed as a lefty course. Well, comparatively it is.

But look at the long term benefit of playing a course which forces you to learn hyzers and anhyzers: The reigning State Champs in Michigan in Open, Masters and Grandmasters all call Kensington home. Great courses build great players.

So if you want to be marginal go play those righty hyzer tunnel courses every day and tell yourself how good you are. Just don't ever go onto real courses where the truth will smack you in the face.

I don't play Berkeley Aquatic Park because:-Fairways shoot across jogging/biking paths, which are always in a virtual traffic jam. On many holes, you simply can't throw while at the same time respecting the safety of other park users.-Holes away from the bike path are full of people, also, camping, picnicking, hanging out, etc..-More than 100 people use the course as their bedroom. I don't play disc golf through people's bedrooms.-A friend got robbed by gunpoint in the parking lot.-One round I found 5 exposed needles on the fairways.-Etc....

There are a few cool holes there, but the course is terrible for disc golf in the modern day. And there is no club taking care of it, what a dump! That place is a real crap hole.

JHern wrote:I don't play Berkeley Aquatic Park because:-Fairways shoot across jogging/biking paths, which are always in a virtual traffic jam. On many holes, you simply can't throw while at the same time respecting the safety of other park users.-Holes away from the bike path are full of people, also, camping, picnicking, hanging out, etc..-More than 100 people use the course as their bedroom. I don't play disc golf through people's bedrooms.-A friend got robbed by gunpoint in the parking lot.-One round I found 5 exposed needles on the fairways.-Etc....

There are a few cool holes there, but the course is terrible for disc golf in the modern day. And there is no club taking care of it, what a dump! That place is a real crap hole.

des moines, iowawaterworks- this course was on a constantly flooding flat park. in the end of its time you couldn't find any teepads save 1 or 2, and some of the baskets were sunk so low you were almost picking it up off the ground. the course was fairly boring anyways, all flat, most of the trees were easily avoidable, holes were short. this course is gone now.southwoods - next to a large highschool, next to police station, tons of blind shots and very overgrown grass with small areas to land in, tracked up like mad where its not covered in weeds. the worst part about this course is that anything other than very good shots will usually land you with time hunting in the woods, and with all the high school students you will not be the only one digging. shirtless star boss throwers.windflower - all the holes are somewhat centered around a creek/ravine that runs down the middle of the park. this ends with lots of shots into the water or down into really hard to reach areas. the course keeps losing trees near the ravine every year and this causes the ravine to wash out further and pool more and more. this course is slowly destroying itself and will likely need modification in the future.

InvaderMirO wrote:des moines, iowawaterworks- this course was on a constantly flooding flat park. in the end of its time you couldn't find any teepads save 1 or 2, and some of the baskets were sunk so low you were almost picking it up off the ground. the course was fairly boring anyways, all flat, most of the trees were easily avoidable, holes were short. this course is gone now.windflower - all the holes are somewhat centered around a creek/ravine that runs down the middle of the park. this ends with lots of shots into the water or down into really hard to reach areas. the course keeps losing trees near the ravine every year and this causes the ravine to wash out further and pool more and more. this course is slowly destroying itself and will likely need modification in the future.

Southwoods isn't as bad as you think. It forces you to throw good shots. I can go out there with a Buzzz and a wizard and shoot under par from the longs. It is a lot like playing Big Creek, if you miss the fairway, it will punish you. Now, I used to play this course a lot as I live right down the street, but all of a sudden there has become a rec explosion out there and you can hardly even get a round in after 3pm. Herds of one-disc'ers everywhere out there. It's like going to Grandview on the weekends, only it's a 9 hole course instead of 18.

About the only course in the metro that I won't play is Windflower for the same reasons posted above. Crivaro is questionable some days as I don't feel having to wear a Kevlar vest to play dg, but I will venture out there every once in a while.

InvaderMirO wrote:des moines, iowawaterworks- this course was on a constantly flooding flat park. in the end of its time you couldn't find any teepads save 1 or 2, and some of the baskets were sunk so low you were almost picking it up off the ground. the course was fairly boring anyways, all flat, most of the trees were easily avoidable, holes were short. this course is gone now.windflower - all the holes are somewhat centered around a creek/ravine that runs down the middle of the park. this ends with lots of shots into the water or down into really hard to reach areas. the course keeps losing trees near the ravine every year and this causes the ravine to wash out further and pool more and more. this course is slowly destroying itself and will likely need modification in the future.

Southwoods isn't as bad as you think. It forces you to throw good shots. I can go out there with a Buzzz and a wizard and shoot under par from the longs. It is a lot like playing Big Creek, if you miss the fairway, it will punish you. Now, I used to play this course a lot as I live right down the street, but all of a sudden there has become a rec explosion out there and you can hardly even get a round in after 3pm. Herds of one-disc'ers everywhere out there. It's like going to Grandview on the weekends, only it's a 9 hole course instead of 18.

About the only course in the metro that I won't play is Windflower for the same reasons posted above. Crivaro is questionable some days as I don't feel having to wear a Kevlar vest to play dg, but I will venture out there every once in a while.

OMFG the kevlar vest thing. i will throw firebirds at 45degree hyzers on Crivaro to make sure i dont put a disc on that basketball court most days...

Buckhorn near Apex, NC. I've never been there, and don't plan to go. From what I hear, there are several holes where one must throw over the lake. I don't like "water holes," at least the ones where I might lose my disc in deep water.

Also, Buckhorn is very close to a nuclear power plant, and the health hazards associated with that.

There is a course in Goldsboro, NC that was flooded the only time I've been there.

At Chapel Hill High School, there are some baskets set up. I saw 8 of them, and every one was right next to a chain link fence. I don't know if the tee areas are marked in any way or not.

Pearsall Park here in San Antonio. Built on an old landfill, about 2/3 of the course is wide-open, treeless abandon. Couple that with massive drop-offs on a few holes (from the mountainous piles of garbage your playing on) and a constant, 50 MPH wind, and you're left with one of the worst courses imaginable (for the most part). The sad thing is, there are some great holes positioned back in the trees are a blast to play. If the other holes were moved to that area, it would be a great course.

McClain Park used to be on this list as it was always an overgrown mud hole with dangerous foliage most of the time. The city and the SADC really stepped up and got McClain in great shape, and now it's a tremendous course. Unfortunately, I live downtown and McClain is a bit of a PITA to get to for me, so I usually end up at Live Oak or Universal City. I'm starting not to play LO as much as there is a bunch of course reconstruction, which is great, but it's been slow (not sure how they played the LOSO with course all torn up) and the noobs keep bothering me since they can't figure out how the course flows ("DGCR LIED!!!"). Hell, I don't even know how the course flows any more, I need someone to tell me. /rant